Archive for the 'agriculture' Category

Norman Borlaug is dead

Norman Borlaug, best known as the man behind the ‘Green Revolution‘ has died. According to The Guardian:

Borlaug won the Nobel in 1970 for his contributions to the science of high-yield crop varieties and bringing other agricultural innovations to the developing world. Many experts credit the green revolution with averting global famine.

Thanks to the revolution, world food production more than doubled between 1960 and 1990. In Pakistan and India, two of the nations that benefited most from the new crop varieties, grain yields more than quadrupled over the period…

Equal parts scientist and humanitarian, Borlaug realised that improved crop varieties were just part of the answer to world hunger, and pressed governments for farmer-friendly economic policies and improved infrastructure to make markets accessible.

His obituary is here and you can also read his Nobel Lecture here.

Fairtrade as ’supermarket internationalism’

Matthias Varul has a nuanced assessment of fairtrade over at e-IR – it’s worth a read and I reckon he’s got it pretty much spot on. To top and tail it:

The idea of fairtrade is, at first glance, a paradoxical one. Observing that the capitalist world market works to the disfavour of producers in the Third World, left wing and Christian campaigners from the 1970s onwards tried to use this unfair market to establish equitable North-South trade relations. The paradox is encapsulated in the slogan: “In the market against the market”…

Fairtrade goods on the supermarket shelves may be sometimes misused to buy a clear conscience – but at the same time they are the bad conscience of the postcolonial world of consumption. The Adam Smith Institute complains about a “moral monopoly” that the fairtrade movement has established – and in a way it’s fair to say that it has. There now is compelling plausibility for fairtrade. Such plausibility might not be strong enough a reason to determine individual purchasing decisions – but it may prepare the ground for institutional safeguards and legislation that might one day make fairtrade a thing of the past by making sure all trade is fair.

I’ll probably be blogging more about this as my dissertation progresses. Dr Varul is also running a day seminar on the topic in October – more info here.

Coffee, aid and trade

Whilst I am still working on various projects before the end of formal teaching, my thoughts have begun to turn to my dissertation, which will address the topic of trade justice – what it means, how it works and so on. If that sounds vague, that’s because (at this stage at least) it is. This video should give you some idea of what I might be looking at and why I’m going to be looking at it: because trade is more important than aid.

If that piques your interest, you can find out more and take action at the film’s website.

Taking on Tesco

ActionAid has a new campaign against Britain’s biggest supermarket. Tesco is famous for cutting prices (great for us shoppers) but then demanding that the costs of those cuts are borne by its suppliers, who are often dependent on serving the supermarket and must agree to any and all conditons Tesco chooses. More on Tesco’s supply line practices from ActionAid and at Wikipedia. Personal testimony here.

Essentially, ActionAid is putting pressure on Tesco to pay its suppliers more. Simple as that. And they have a cool video.

This is part of the ongoing Who Pays? campaign.

EU’s €1bn budgetary surplus – where to spend it

Given that I failed to write yesterday (Blog Action Day) and may well fail to write tomorrow (International Day for the Eradication of Poverty) and that today is World Food Day, it seems like a good time to take some (blog-based) action on food and poverty.

My friend Alex at Global Justice: Tipping the Scales emailed me about this petition from the anti-poverty campaigning organisation ONE. Apparently, the EU has a billion euro surplus from this year’s budget. Now some would say that this money should be saved up for when the Union needs it, perhaps in some kind of financial crisis… Others will say that it should be returned to citizens who had to contribute towards it in their taxes. But, given the EU’s Common Agricultural Policy and its malign impact on food supplies and poverty, there is a certain justice in the idea that it ought to be spent on ‘additional development assistance’ for African farmers. If anyone should be told this, it’s President Sarkozy (see my previous post on Sarkozy’s attitude as regards European agriculture). So, in the same of arbitrary international observances days (all of them), get yourself to ONE.org and sign the petition.

Lee Kyung Hae on the WTO

This statement was distributed by Lee Kyung Hae shortly before he stabbed himself to death at the WTO meeting in Cancun, on 16 September 2003. It deserves inclusion here, if only in acknowledgement of the strength of feeling that provoked the suicide.

I am 56 years old, a farmer from South Korea who has strived to solve our problems with the great hope in the ways to organize farmers’ unions. But I have mostly failed, as many other farm leaders elsewhere have failed.

Soon after the Uruguay Round Agreement was sealed, we Korean farmers realized that our destinies are no longer in our own hands. We cannot seem to do anything to stop the waves that have destroyed our communities where we have been settled for hundreds of years. To make myself brave, I have tried to find the real reason and the force behind those waves. And I reached the conclusion, here in front of the gates of the WTO. I am crying out my words to you, that have for so long boiled in my body:

I ask: for whom do you negotiate now? For the people, or for yourselves?

Stop basing your WTO negotiations on flawed logic and mere diplomatic gestures.

Take agriculture out of the WTO system.

Since (massive importing) we small farmers have never been paid over our production costs. What would be your emotional reaction if your salary dropped to a half without understanding the reasons?

Farmers who gave up early have gone to urban slums. Others who have tried to escape from the vicious cycle have met bankruptcy due to accumulated debts. For me, I couldn’t do anything but just look around at the vacant houses, old and eroding. Once I went to a house where a farmer abandoned his life by drinking a toxic chemical because of his uncontrollable debts. I could do nothing but listen to the howling of his wife. If you were me, how would you feel?

Widely paved roads lead to large apartments, buildings, and factories in Korea. Those lands paved now were mostly rice paddies built by generations over thousands of years. They provided the daily food and materials in the past. Now the ecological and hydrological functions of paddies are even more crucial. Who will protect our rural vitality, community traditions, amenities, and environment?

I believe that farmers’ situation in many other developing countries is similar. We have in common the problem of dumping, import surges, lack of government budgets, and too many people. Tariff protection would be the practical solution.

I have been so worried watching TV and hearing the news that starvation is prevalent in many Less Developed Countries, although the international price of grain is so cheap. Earning money through trade should not be their means of securing food. They need access to land and water. Charity? No! Let them work again!

My warning goes out to all citizens that human beings are in an endangered situation. That uncontrolled multinational corporations and a small number of big WTO Members are leading an undesirable globalization that is inhumane, environmentally degrading, farmer-killing, and undemocratic. It should be stopped immediately. Otherwise the false logic of neoliberalism will wipe out the diversity of global agriculture and be disastrous to all human beings.

Food security round-up

An article by Alexandra Spieldoch at Foreign Policy in Focus criticises liberalisation of trade and investment, as well as many national governments and accuses them of worsening the food crisis.

She believes that:

“the failed [Doha] talks signal a growing understanding that trade liberalization has destabilized local food systems and hurt farmers, contributing to both the long-term and short-causes of today’s food crisis.”

Doubtless trade liberalisation has hurt some farmers. But it has helped others. It has both hurt and helped others. It’s partly a judgment call, really, to say whether liberalisation has been beneficial or not on balance. I find I must disagree with Spieldoch. There is no question that farmers’ livelihoods are being harmed under current trade arrangements, but I would suggest that liberalisation, if properly enacted, would greatly help the farmers the author refers to. Her implicit claim that such policies aid agribusiness concerns me. In the US and EU agribusiness is a great – perhaps the greatest – beneficiary of protectionism!

Spieldoch goes on to compare recent reports of the World Bank and the UN Interagency Task Force on the Global Food Crisis.

The World Bank’s “New Deal on Global Food Policy” is attacked for its focus on expanding trade rather than helping farmers. It seems too much for Spieldoch to suppose that the World Bank might think that the two are intimately related.

Subsequently, the UN’s framework is accused of paving the way for agribusinesses to dominate, at the expense of smaller-scale farming – due to its support for World Bank loans to public-private partnerships. It is worth remembering, that the UN is generally considered to be a far less economically liberal organisation than most international economic institutions. At any rate, Spieldoch is begging the question. The UN draft document she refers to explicitly and openly states that “supporting smallholder farming is not enough”. Indeed, I find it hard to argue with that. Of course, the devil is in the detail, something that this draft offers little of. Nonetheless, it seems perverse to reject out of hand any attempt to engage with private large-scale industry.

The article asserts that intergovernmental “institutions are still focused on investment and growth in agriculture based on privatization schemes, deregulation, and trade facilitation” and that “this is exactly the approach that has contributed to many of the problems we are seeing today in the food system”. I find it hard to accept that the heavy regulation and widespread nationalisation of agriculture would have resulted in a better situation in “the food system” than we see today. Indeed, it seems likely that such a state of affairs would lead to a far worse crisis.

Meanwhile, Lord Haskins argues the case for free trade as a superior guarantor of food security. I was surprised to read that “today Britain is about 60 per cent self-sufficient in food production.” Haskins believes that the EU should encourage greater food output:

“All restraints on production should be abandoned. Plans to switch land from food to biofuels should be urgently reviewed. Finally, the downward trend in expenditure on food research should be reversed.”

Whilst he does not see the short-term crisis as too severe, he warns that “in the medium term there may well be a global food crisis of Malthusian proportions if current demographic and climate trends continue.”

In the FT, it is reported that the Director-General of the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organisation has criticised the “neo-colonial” plans of countries (such as China and Saudi Arabia), as well as western corporations and investors to buy up agricultural land in Africa to grow food for domestic markets. Apparently, “countries such as Sudan, Ethiopia and Ukraine are opening their doors.” One is unsure whether to condemn the gall of the investors, or to commend their imagination. Of course, if Ethiopia is “very eager” to rent out her land, who am I to criticise? But at the same time, one can’t help feel an almost instinctual sense of concern and alarm.

Global Development Matters: international development as an issue in the US presidential election?

Global Development Matters is a campaign run by the Center for Global Development aimed at raising the profile of international development within the upcoming US presidential elections. The video below is one of several produced to persuade US citizens to consider their views on agriculture. Aside from the clichéd yet obligatory generic African drumbeats, I think it does the job pretty well. The way that both the video and the site make both moral and pragmatic arguments is commendable. The ethical angle is fine, but preaching to the converted is not an option – the CGD is now rightly taking their case to Americans with more self-interested concerns. As the closing shots say: “we will all benefit… here and there”.

On a tangential note, I particularly enjoyed this week’s challenging quiz on the Global Development Matters site. It asks readers to answer the following question.

Americans participate in global trade by:

1. Buying products made in other countries

2. Selling products abroad

3. Both 1 & 2

34th G8 summit, Tōyako, Japan: a preview

The G8 meet this week in Tōyako, Japan. Today’s discussions are due to focus on international development and Africa in particular.

Increasing structural support for agricultural reform in developing countries (see posts passim) is firmly on the agenda. UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon wants the G8 to triple research and development aid. He has also echoed calls for export restrictions for d to be lowered and for excessive agricultural subsidies in developed countries to be phased out.

In a similar vein, according to The Guardian, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown believes that the meetings can be used to bolster support for trade liberalisation at the WTO. The summit must “secure a breakthrough or ‘risk protectionism rapidly spreading across the globe’.”

Despite all this, the FT reports that G8 leaders are not expected to uphold their 2005 promises to increase development aid to $25bn annually. Additionally, attempts to include the so-called G5 of emerging economies (China, Brazil, Mexico, South Africa and India) are failing.

G8 conferences have real power to control the degree and direction of macropolicy on a number of crucial issues. Yet the fact that little has been said publicly about the significance of the meeting is concerning. The rhetoric of “high stakes” diplomacy can often be a precursor to real developments. All the usual demonstrations have been going on, but compared to previous protests, they have seemed muted so far, perhaps due to the saturation police presence. It is still early to say, but unfortunately, judging by the media commentary on the event, this conference looks in danger of ending not with a bang, but a whimper. I look forward to being proven wrong over the next few days.

Agriculture and Doha: the food crisis’ further complexities

On Tuesday I linked to an article in the FT that argued that the food crisis is an opportunity for the conclusion of the Doha Round. It transpires that the OECD is of the same opinion.

An extensive story in the New York Times looks into the details and, on balance, is not optimistic. According to the NYT, hoarding behaviour is increasing as “beggar-thy-neighbour economics make a comeback.  Additionally, whilst the FT article asserts the heightened potential for subsidy reductions, the NYT says that the food crisis may make liberalisation more difficult. Whilst subsidies are crucial to the Doha negotiations, restrictions on agricultural exports (food security, or hoarding if you prefer) are a not a significant part of the agenda.

According to BRIDGES Weekly Trade News Digest, the agricultural negotiations chair will push for further pre-ministerial talks, beginning today.

WTO mini-ministerial update: some reactions

Timothy Wise and Kevin Gallagher write in the Guardian that “the proposals on the table [at the Doha Round negotiations] deserve to be sent back to the drawing board”. Their view is based on the World Bank’s projections of the benefits and costs of “a likely deal”, in which “global gains projected for 2015 are just $96bn, with only $16bn going to the developing world.”

I have some concerns about Wise and Gallagher’s assessment and one member of the public encapsulates them well, commenting that “it’s naive and misleading to assess the value of a trade deal on immediate tariff changes.” The article is, at the very least, guilty of oversimplification. There is more to the Doha Round than tariff adjustments and at any rate, those changes should be evaluated in the longer-term.

Meanwhile, at IPE Zone, Emmanuel Yujuico assesses (via Handel’s Messiah) a Washington Post op-ed which lauds Pascal Lamy as the “last hope for global free trade”. In contrast to Wise and Gallagher, the editorial believes that “at a time of rising food prices, a successful Doha round could add billions of dollars to the earning potential of farmers in the developing world”.

However, the IPE Zone post rightly takes issue with the paper’s somewhat bizarre assertion that “the vast majority of poor countries are on board for an agreement”. The article is a piece of opinion, not a work of academia, but I for one would have preferred some external reference or justification to back up this comment.

The piece also repeats the seemingly-widespread belief that the failure of Doha will inevitably result in the collapse of the WTO itself. One worries that such a claim, especially in the pages of a respectable newspaper, dangerously contributes to the potential for a classic case of the media-driven self-fulfilling prophecy.

Most disturbing of all is the report in the FT that Nicolas Sarkozy has declared his willingness to block negotiations, should they look like harming European agriculture. According to the FT, Sarkozy said that “in a world where there are 800m poor people who cannot satisfy their hunger and where a kid dies every 30 seconds from hunger, I will never accept a reduction in agricultural production on the altar of global liberalism”. Sarkozy believes that a deal later this month would result in the loss of 100,000 European jobs in farming.

The article is troubling for two reasons. Firstly, it wrongly describes Pascal Lamy as the WTO’s secretary-general. One would expect better from the Financial Times’ editorial staff. But more seriously, the French president’s grandstanding is irresponsible and cynical.

Despite his avowed concern for those 800 million in poverty, Sarkozy’s policy is to continue the subsidies that ensure poor farmers in the developing world cannot compete with richer agriculturalists in the developed world. Since European farmers cannot turn a profit in open competition and under the fairer conditions that a Doha deal would ensure, Sarkozy will do his best to scupper negotiations.

Sarkozy’s words are selfish nationalism disguised as humanitarianism. This is not about morality, nor about economics. It is pure politics, in the lowest sense of the word.

UPDATE: See Peter Mandelson on this topic (from BBC Newsnight).

Trade policy and the food crisis: conflicting views

Much of the human race lives with perpetual food shortages. According to the World Food Programme, 25,000 people die every day from simple hunger. Nonetheless, the media has summarised the current pressures on food prices with the convenient shorthand of “the food crisis”.

It is, however, true that current phenomena are quantitively different from the endemic hunger faced by so many. Indeed, the WFP has acknowledged that the current situation is the most significant challenge it has yet faced.

Is the crisis being used to justify protectionism in the name of food security? Without doubt. It is also being opportunistically manipulated by those in favour of concluding the World Trade Organization’s Doha Round as soon as possible.

Two recent articles fit these patterns in their discussion of the best way to address the crisis. Simply put, The Economist is – unsurprisingly – in favour of further liberalisation, whilst the Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy’s Sophia Murphy argues for less.

First of all, The Economist’s repeated emphasis on the complexity of trade policy as related to food security and poverty must be commended. Too often these debates have been characterised by generalisation. A willingness to accept to subtlety and exceptions is a key hallmark of a mature analysis, whether one accepts that analysis or not.

However, neither of these articles sufficiently examines the relationship between agricultural capacity and productivity. Given that the majority of the world’s rural poor are not net food sellers, it seems that the gap between the potential and the reality of productivity should be addressed. The decreasing focus of international aid on rural farming may be implicated, as highlighted by WTO Director-General Pascal Lamy. The World Bank is now planning to almost double its agricultural loans to African countries.

Direct and short-term emergency food aid (that is, sending food itself, rather than money) can be even more problematic. Large-scale food donations can save lives in the short-term. Yet as Javier Pereira points out, floods of external produce into the local area can be extremely harmful to local agricultural capacity in the longer term, thus perpetuating structural weaknesses.

I’d like to address some specific concerns that struck me when reading Murphy’s article. It argues that “the first step for governments should be to shape trade according to their country’s collective preferences.” This essentially seems to be an attempt to suggest that the current crisis can be dealt with best if multilateral rules on trade policy were relaxed. But it is hard to see how this would not result in a collective action problem; individual countries’ preferences are surely bound to take the form of a knee-jerk resort to economic nationalism.

Indeed, many countries have succumbed to the temptation to reduce tariffs and restrict exports of foodstuffs, either via quotas or taxation, slowing trade in food and further harming many of those most in need. EU Trade Commissioner Peter Mandelson has called for the WTO to exert “pressure” on net food exporting countries to resist the temptation to cut exports, though it is hard to see how pressure from Geneva would outweigh domestic political expediency. See, for example, these accounts of public discontent and disorder. It would be nigh on impossible for any government to willingly maintain economically liberal trade policies on agriculture amidst this level of anger, even desperation, in their populations.

Murphy also scorns the Doha Development Agenda’s potential, writing that “the WTO has no mandate even to discuss, let alone tackle, the major sources of uncertainty in the food system”. On the other hand, she subsequently complains that the WTO “has little to say” about the causes of the crisis – identified here as climate change, commodity speculation, hoarding and oil prices, amongst other things. These latter factors are, of course, equally beyond the WTO’s remit and it seems unfair to criticise the organisation for engaging with the food crisis whilst complaining that it fails to address other issues that are also beyond its formal scope.

I cannot disagree, however, with Murphy’s sentiment that whilst “global trade benefits immeasurably from clear, strong rules… those rules have to pay attention to social, environmental and political realities or they cannot last”. Similarly, I must concur with The Economist’s conclusion that “first, the [World Bank], and others, should beware sweeping generalisations about the impact of food prices on the poor. Second, the nature of trade reform matters.”

Yet the crisis cannot simply be explained as the misapplication of international trade rules. Robert Paarlberg, writing in Prospect, takes an alternative line. The cost of rice tripled between January and April this year. Yet a mere 6% of global rice production is traded with other countries, according to The Economist’s article. As Paarlberg has it, “most of the world’s hungry citizens do not get their food from the world market, and most who rely on the world market are not poor or vulnerable to hunger.” He argues that, broadly speaking, much of the public dissent about food prices is coming from urban populations who, while feeling the pinch, are certainly not starving.

Again, the complexity of the crisis is manifest. The acute problem of rising food prices is part of the global market in commodities and as such, is embedded in patterns of global trade. The apparently connected but distinct phenomenon of domestic shortages and resultant chronic hunger is rooted in problems of infrastructure, governance and international aid. These matters are structural and any attempts to deal with them need to be appropriately extensive. Rather than being short-term, superficial and restricted solely to local solutions, they must be far-reaching and robust.


I’m a student in the UK, working towards a master's degree in International Political Economy. This blog is intended to complement my studies by addressing perennial issues and current affairs. Please see the about page for more information, or the contact page to get in touch. My personal website is here.

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